Saturday, April 20th TV listings for OPB Plus (KOPB-DT2) Portland, OR
The Whitney Reynolds Show Greatness Generation
Immigration lawyer Susan Cohen fights for the rights of all people; Olympic gold medalist Cullen Jones; actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt; Tom Felter and his daughter show others how to properly deal with people with cognitive impairment.
Consuelo Mack WealthTrack Commercial Real Estate Opportunities
Jeffrey Kolitch, Baron Real Estate Fund, discusses opportunities in commercial real estate.
To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé
Author and professor Jade Sasser.
Washington Week With The Atlantic
Eugene Daniels, POLITICO; Seung Min Kim, The Associated Press; Vivian Salama, The Wall Street Journal; Graeme Wood, The Atlantic.
Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator Ides of March
As Caesar takes control of Rome and consolidates his grip over the republic, he awards himself ever-greater powers; appointed dictator for one year to restore peace, Caesar soon extends this until he is declared dictator for life.
Five hundred nautical miles from the North Pole, a research team sets out to measure the world's largest and oldest sea ice floes.
The 18-day, 2,000-mile Northwest Passage Project expedition through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago aboard the Swedish research icebreaker Oden.
Consuelo Mack WealthTrack Commercial Real Estate Opportunities
Jeffrey Kolitch, Baron Real Estate Fund, discusses opportunities in commercial real estate.
The Whitney Reynolds Show Greatness Generation
Immigration lawyer Susan Cohen fights for the rights of all people; Olympic gold medalist Cullen Jones; actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt; Tom Felter and his daughter show others how to properly deal with people with cognitive impairment.
Divided We Fall: Listening With Curiosity
Two groups of people divided over President Donald Trump come to listen to each other and form bonds across political divides.
A college class where students implement policy changes that address the root causes of problems facing American society, including devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina and homelessness among college students.
Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator Ides of March
As Caesar takes control of Rome and consolidates his grip over the republic, he awards himself ever-greater powers; appointed dictator for one year to restore peace, Caesar soon extends this until he is declared dictator for life.
Five hundred nautical miles from the North Pole, a research team sets out to measure the world's largest and oldest sea ice floes.
The 18-day, 2,000-mile Northwest Passage Project expedition through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago aboard the Swedish research icebreaker Oden.
To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé
Author and professor Jade Sasser.
Washington Week With The Atlantic
Eugene Daniels, POLITICO; Seung Min Kim, The Associated Press; Vivian Salama, The Wall Street Journal; Graeme Wood, The Atlantic.
Helsinki's underground bunkers; struggling belly dancers in Turkey; Italian village; happy home for women in Britain.
Firing Line With Margaret Hoover
Constitutional scholar Melissa Murray talks about Donald Trump's first criminal trial in Manhattan and the political implications of trying a former president.
POV Uýra: The Rising Forest
Uýra shares ancestral knowledge with Indigenous youth in the Amazon, confronting historical racism, transphobia and environmental destruction.
POV Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust
Native American, Japanese American and rancher communities form an alliance to defend their land and water from Los Angeles.
Rising Against Asian Hate: One Day in March
The aftermath of the 2021 mass shootings in Atlanta and how the Asian American community came together to fight hate; the struggles and triumphs of the AAPI community.
America ReFramed Hundreds of Thousands
A family coping with the unjust incarceration of an ailing mentally ill loved one calls on their faith and the strength of community to right a systemic wrong.
Seven short films created with Indigenous communities across Turtle Island in the U.S. and Colombia address what reciprocity means to their communities.
POV Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust
Native American, Japanese American and rancher communities form an alliance to defend their land and water from Los Angeles.
Rising Against Asian Hate: One Day in March
The aftermath of the 2021 mass shootings in Atlanta and how the Asian American community came together to fight hate; the struggles and triumphs of the AAPI community.
America ReFramed Hundreds of Thousands
A family coping with the unjust incarceration of an ailing mentally ill loved one calls on their faith and the strength of community to right a systemic wrong.
Seven short films created with Indigenous communities across Turtle Island in the U.S. and Colombia address what reciprocity means to their communities.
Wild Hope Woodpecker Wars
Scientists, soldiers and landowners forge an alliance to safeguard the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker.
Wild Hope Does Nature Have Rights?
Conservationists invoke the rights of nature -- granting wild species their own legal right to exist -- in order to save biodiversity hotspots in Ecuador.
Greta Thunberg: A Year to Change the World
Greta Thunberg travels from the World Economic Forum in Switzerland to Poland, where she speaks with miners who have lost their jobs; a visit with David Attenborough in the U.K.